Thursday, March 9, 2017

Aurora Ontario History

The Aurora Site, also known as the "Old Fort," "Old Indian Fort," "Murphy Farm" or "Hill Fort" site, is a sixteenth-century Huron-Wendat ancestral village located on one of the headwater tributaries of the East Holland River on the north side of the Oak Ridges Moraine in present-day Whitchurch–Stouffville, approximately 30 kilometres north of Toronto.

This Huron ancestral village was located on 3.4 hectares (8.4 acres) of
land and the settlement was fortified with multiple rows of palisades. The community arrived ca. 1550, likely moving en masse from the so-called Mantle Site located nine kilometres to the south-east in what is today urban Stouffville.

The Aurora/Old Fort site is located at the south-east corner of Kennedy Road and Vandorf Side Road, east of the hamlet of Vandorf in the town of Whitchurch–Stouffville. The Aurora site was occupied at the same time as the nearby Ratcliff site.

The Rouge River
trail, used by the Huron and then later by the French to travel between
Lake Ontario and Lake Simcoe / Georgian Bay, ran through the Aurora
site.

"Perhaps the busiest and best documented of these routes was that
which followed the Humber River valley northward ... although another
trail of equal importance and antiquity and used earlier than the former
by the French, extended from the mouth of the Rouge River northward to
the headwaters of the Little Rouge and over the drainage divide to the
East Branch of the Holland River at Holland Landing."

The Aurora/Old Fort site was indiscriminately looted by collectors
throughout the eighteenth and early nineteenth century. An 1885 report
on Whitchurch Township notes that two thousand interments took place on
the site, and that another smaller burial site was found two hundred
yards from the site beside a large pond.

The self-trained archaeologist William Brodie wrote two
archaeological reports on his findings at the Old Fort site (1888; 1901)
dating back to his first visit in 1846. In reference to the Old Fort site, Brodie wrote in 1901:

"To say that a ton of archaeological material was collected from the
County of York sites, is a moderate estimate. Some of it is in European
museums, some in the States, and some of it in Laval University,
some of it is still in the hands of amateur collectors, and a little of
it has been secured for the Provincial Museum, but the greater part of
it, once in the keeping of private collectors, is gone, being collected
and lost, as private collections often are."

A complete map of the site was produced in 1930 by the amateur archaeologist Peter Pringle.

The Aurora/Old Fort site was completely excavated in 1947 and 1957 by the University of Toronto. The 1947 dig was the first student excavation by the university, and it was led by John Norman Emerson. Emerson's doctoral work was largely based on the excavations of the Aurora/Old Fort site.

This excavation contributed to the conclusions of archeologists and
anthropologists that the Wendat coalesced as a people in this area,
rather than further east in the St. Lawrence River valley, as was
thought at one time. Findings in the late twentieth century at the Ratcliff Site and in 2005 at the Mantle Site have provided more evidence of sixteenth-century settlements by ancestral Wendat in this region.